Open loop laser power control in optical navigation

ABSTRACT

A current output of a drive signal, modulated between two current settings, is applied to a laser diode, e.g. VCSEL. The settings are selected such that laser diode&#39;s power output meets the average power and peak power limits of the eye safety standards. The drive signal having a duty cycle toggling between the two settings. The duty cycle is selected such that the average and peak power limits are met for the given upper current setting. The drive circuit may include an analog modulator or digital analog converter (DAC) for maintaining the lower and upper current settings. When the drive circuit is implemented as an integrated circuit, the DAC may be incorporated into the IC. The sensitivity of the DAC is selected to maintain the desired lower and upper current settings.

BACKGROUND

Products containing light emitting diodes (LEDs) or lasers that emit light in the visible or infrared range must conform to eye safety requirements, IEC 60825-1. If the optical flux that can impinge on a user's eye exceeds the standard, the device must be labeled an eye safety hazard, which is undesirable. This requirement applies not only during normal operation of the circuit but when predictable single faults occur in the circuit.

FIG. 1 illustrates a prior art eye safety circuit. This simple circuit uses a fuse. When the bias current exceeds the eye safety requirement, the fuse blows. FIG. 2 illustrates another prior art eye safety circuit. This circuit is a retriggerable transistor circuit that shunts current away from the LED when the current exceeds a design threshold.

The prior art circuits detect when the LED current is higher than some preset current. However, the circuit in FIG. 1 cannot detect a fault in which the LED cathode is connected to GROUND, and the fuse cannot be readily integrated onto an integrated circuit. The circuit in FIG. 2 can detect a fault where the LED cathode is shorted to Ground, but this circuit would be difficult to implement on a standard CMOS integrated circuit process.

As shown in FIG. 3, Kinoshita in “Semiconductor Laser Driving Device for Stabilizing the Optical Output Thereof”, U.S. Pat. No. 4,884,280, issued 28 Nov. 1989, disclosed using a monitoring photodiode having an output indicative of the actual output of the laser. A comparator compares a reference signal indicative of a reference output level of the laser and the monitor photodiode signal. The comparator output signal reflects the change in the actual optical output level of the laser. An abnormal current eliminator controls the comparator output so that the signal has limited amplitude. Hence, the drive current to the laser is forcibly decreased to safe drive current levels.

Shown in FIG. 4, Kiely, et al. “Semiconductor Laser Package With Power Monitoring System”, U.S. Pat. No. 5,953,355, issued 14 Sep. 1999, disclosed a VCSEL that includes a power monitoring system integrated into the cap of the VCSEL package instead of a monitoring photodiode. Similar to Kinoshita, the output of the monitoring system is used control the drive current to the laser.

SUMMARY

In the present invention, a drive signal having a current output that is modulated between two current settings is applied to a laser, e.g. VCSEL. The two current settings are selected such that the power output of the laser meets the average power and peak power limits of the eye safety standards.

In on embodiment, the drive circuit provides a drive signal having a duty cycle toggling between the two current settings such that the power of the drive signal is below the average power limit of the eye safety level standards. The lower current setting is set to be the minimum drive signal for a laser. The duty cycle is selected such that the average and peak power limits are met for the given upper current setting. For example, the lower current setting may provide a power slightly below the average power limit while the upper current setting may provide a power slightly above the average power limit. A 50% duty cycle could be applied.

The drive circuit may include an analog or digital means for maintaining the lower and upper current settings. When the drive circuit is implemented as an integrated circuit (IC), a digital-to-analog converter (DAC) may be incorporated into the IC. The resolution of the DAC is selected to maintain the desired lower and upper current settings.

To determine the setting for the laser, the following steps may be taken. The laser is sequenced through a series of current settings. Two of the current settings are selected such that the power output of the laser meets both the average power limit and the peak power limit.

The drive circuit may be incorporated into an optical navigation device. In an illustrative example, an optical mouse sensor includes the drive circuit having a current output modulated between two current settings. The optical navigation device further includes the laser. In operation, modulated drive signal is applied to a laser. The laser beam is projected at a surface. A reflected signal that indicates positional data is received from the surface. The steps of projecting and receiving are repeated. Periodically, the reflected signals are compared to determine differences in positional data.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1 illustrates a prior art eye safety circuit.

FIG. 2 illustrates another prior art eye safety circuit.

FIG. 3 illustrates a prior art monitoring photodiode circuit for lasers.

FIG. 4 illustrates another prior art power monitoring system for lasers.

FIG. 5 illustrates an embodiment of the present invention.

FIGS. 6A-B illustrate embodiments of a DAC within the current mirror shown in FIG. 5.

FIG. 7 illustrates a process flowchart for initial measurement 100.

FIG. 8 illustrates a process flowchart for normal operation 200.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

The present invention is directed towards maintaining laser power output between two levels. When used in an optical navigation device, the first level is the minimum power needed to provide good tracking while the second level is the maximum power output allowed by current eye safety standards, e.g. IEC 60825-1 or ANSI Z136.1. A fixed current drive with linear temperature compensation circuit provides current to a vertical cavity surface-emitting laser (VCSEL). The temperature compensation slope is selected to match average VCSEL characteristics, e.g. +0.25%/degree C. The fixed current at room temperature needs to be within 1 or 2% of the ideal value to optimally maintain the power window over temperature.

In the present invention, a drive signal having a current output that is modulated between two current settings is applied to a laser, e.g. VCSELs, edge emitting laser diodes, super-resonant cavity LEDs, high efficiency LEDs, and any semiconductor-based light source. The two current settings are selected such that the power output of the laser meets the average power and peak power limits of the eye safety standards.

FIG. 5 illustrates an embodiment of the system 10 according to the present invention. An operational amplifier 12 receives on a reference signal Vref on a positive input. A gate of field effect transistor (FET) 14 receives the output of the operational amplifier 12 while its drain is connected to a negative input of the operational amplifier 12. A variable resistor 16 connects between the drain of the FET 14 and ground. An input of a first current mirror 18 is connected to the source of FET 14. A second current mirror 20 receives the output of the current mirror 18. A laser diode 22 connects between power Vdd and the current mirror 20.

In operation, the drive circuit provides a drive signal having a duty cycle toggling between the two current settings such that the power of the drive signal is below the average power limit of the eye safety level standards. The duty cycle is selected such that the average and peak power limits are met for the given upper current setting. For example, the lower current setting may provide a power slightly below the average power limit while the upper current setting may provide a power slightly above the average power limit. A 50% duty cycle could be applied.

In alternate embodiments, the second current mirror 20, shown in FIG. 5, may be replaced by an analog modulator (not shown) or DAC for maintaining the lower and upper current settings. The resolution of the DAC is selected to maintain the desired lower and upper current settings.

To determine the current setting of the laser, the following steps may be taken. The laser is sequenced through a series of current settings. Two of the current settings are selected such that the power output of the laser meets both the average power limit and the peak power limit.

The drive circuit may be incorporated into an optical navigation device. In an illustrative example, an optical mouse sensor includes the drive circuit having a current output modulated between two current settings. The optical navigation device further includes the laser. In operation, modulated drive signal is applied to a laser. The modulation frequency can be high relative to duration of the navigation device electronic shutter duration (e.g. above 1 MHz). The modulation frequency can also be low relative to the frame rate of the navigation device (for example changing once every 2 to 32 frames). The laser beam is projected at a surface. A reflected signal is received from the surface, the signal indicates positional data. The steps of projecting and receiving are repeated. Periodically, the reflected signals are compared to determine differences in positional data.

FIGS. 6A-B illustrate embodiments of a DAC replacing the current mirror 20 shown in FIG. 5.

In FIG. 6A, a 3-bit digital-to-analog converter (DAC) 26 functions as the current control. FET 28 connects between the first current mirror 18 shown in FIG. 5 and ground. The source and gate of FET 28 are tied together at node A. For a first array of FETs 30 _(x), where x=1 . . . 13, each FET connects between the laser diode 22 shown in FIG. 5 and ground. The gates of FETs 30 _(x) are tied together at node A. FET 28 and FETs 30 _(x) have the same physical dimensions. For a second array of FETs 32 _(y), where y=0 . . . 6, each FET connects between the laser diode 22 shown in FIG. 5 and and ground. In the second array of FETs, the gate of each FET connects to a respective switch 34 _(y). The poles of each switch can connect to either node A or ground. The selector of each switch connects to a respective output of a decoder.

FIG. 6B illustrates use of a 7-bit DAC provides current control. FET 60 connects between the first current mirror 18 shown in FIG. 5 and ground. The source and gate of FET 60 are tied together at node A. In place of the first array shown in FIG. 6B, a FET 62, having a width 65× that of FET 60, connects between the laser diode shown in FIG. 5 and ground.

For FETs 64 _(y), where y=0, . . . 6, each FET 64 _(y) has a drain connected to the laser diode of FIG. 5 and a source connected to the drain of the second FET 66 _(y). The source of second FET 66 _(y) connects to ground. The gate of the second FET 66 y connects to the 7 bit control digital control value C0-C6. The gates of the first FETs 64 _(y) are electrically tied together at node A. The size of each FET, 64 _(x), is 2^(x) that of FET 60.

As previously mentioned, the DAC may be added to an integrated circuit (IC) that controls the VCSEL. In the embodiment of FIG. 6A, control hardware provides a 3-bit value that can change the current in 5% intervals by disconnecting 0 to 7 parallel field effect transistors (FETs). By alternating between each of the 2 closest settings with these 8 choices, the time average value of current (and thus laser power) can be set with infinite precision. Each 5% step in current causes roughly a 20% change in VCSEL light output. To achieve laser power within 5% of the target, the current needs to be within ˜1% of the ideal value. By varying the duty cycle of the alternation between lower and higher current, the desired average can be achieved. The tolerance may be changed by altering the resolution of the DAC, e.g. 1 bit or 8 bits.

For example, if for each group of 16 pictures that an optical navigation device takes, e.g. 16 frames, the laser current is higher for n frames and lower for 16-n frames, then average current is: $I_{ave} = {{llower} + \frac{\left( {{lhigher} - {llower}} \right)*n}{16}}$

When lhigher is ˜5% greater than llower, the average value can be adjusted with a precision of 1/16 of 5% or 0.3%. This is sufficient for the typical laser diode's power to be within about 1.2% of the desired value at the adjustment temperature. That leaves the bulk of the power budget for residual temperature variation.

FIG. 7 illustrates a process flowchart for initial measurement 100. In step 110, the power is measured at each calibration step. In step 120, set the power to be at the calibration step that provides just under the desired average power. In step 130, set the power to be at the calibration step that provides just above the desired average power. In step 140, calculate the duty cycle between the two power levels. In step 150, store the calibration settings.

The calibration settings saved in memory could be corrupted by noise events. Alternatively, to ensure safe operation even in this situation, the settings and an alternate representation (such as a one's complement value) can be saved in different memory addresses. On a regular basis, these two representations can be compared to verify integrity. When valid values are no longer available, the drive circuit can default to the lowest allowable average current (or turn off the VCSEL) to stay below the eye safety requirements.

FIG. 8 illustrates a process flowchart for normal operation 200. In step 210, the calibration settings are retreived from memory. In step 220, the calibration settings are sent to the drive circuit. In step 230, the drive circuit applies the calibration settings. The end result is an average laser power close to target. 

1. A circuit comprising: a drive circuit having a current output modulated between two current settings; and a laser receiving the current output, having a power output that meets eye safety levels.
 2. A circuit, as defined in claim 1, wherein the laser is a semiconductor-based laser.
 3. A circuit, as defined in claim 2, wherein the semiconductor-based laser is selected from a group that includes vertical cavity surface emitting lasers, edge emitting laser diodes, super-resonant cavity light emitting diodes (LEDs), and high efficiency LEDs.
 4. A circuit, as defined in claim 1, the drive circuit further including a digital-to analog-converter.
 5. A circuit, as defined in claim 1, wherein the drive circuit provides a drive signal having a duty cycle toggling between the two current settings such that the power of the drive signal is below the average power limit of the eye safety level standards.
 6. A circuit, as defined in claim 1, wherein: a first of the two current settings provides at least a minimum drive signal; and a second of the two current settings provides a drive signal that meets eye safety level standards.
 7. A circuit, as defined in claim 6, wherein the two current settings are adjacent current settings.
 8. A circuit, as defined in claim 1, wherein: a first of the two current settings provides at least a minimum drive signal; and a second of the two current settings provides a drive signal below the peak power limit of the eye safety level standards.
 9. An optical navigation device comprising: an optical mouse sensor that includes a drive circuit having a current output modulated between two current settings; and a laser receiving the current output, having a power output that meets eye safety levels.
 10. An optical navigation device, as defined in claim 9, wherein the laser is a vertical cavity surface emitting laser.
 11. An optical navigation device, as defined in claim 9, the drive circuit further including a a digital-to analog-converter.
 12. An optical navigation device, as defined in claim 9, wherein the drive circuit provides a drive signal having a duty cycle toggling between the two current settings such that the power of the drive signal is below the average power limit of the eye safety standards.
 13. An optical navigation device, as defined in claim 9, wherein: a first of the two current settings provides at least a minimum drive signal; and a second of the two current settings provides a drive signal that meets eye safety level standards.
 14. An optical navigation device, as defined in claim 13, wherein the two current settings are adjacent current settings.
 15. An optical navigation device, as defined in claim 9, wherein: a first of the two current settings provides at least a minimum drive signal; and a second of the two current settings provides a drive signal below the peak power limit of the eye safety level standards.
 16. A method comprising: sequencing a laser through a series of current settings; selecting two of the series of current settings such that the power output of the laser meets eye safety levels; and applying a modulating signal to the laser.
 17. A method, as defined in claim 16, applying a modulating signal including: selecting two current settings; and applying a drive signal having a duty cycle toggling between the two current settings such that the power of within the drive signal is below the average power limit of the eye safety standard.
 18. A method, as defined in claim 17, selecting two current settings including: selecting a first current setting that provides at least a minimum drive signal; and selecting a second current setting that provides a drive signal that meets eye safety level standards.
 19. A method, as defined in claim 16, wherein: a first of the two current settings provides at least a minimum drive signal; and a second of the two current settings provides a drive signal below the peak power limit of the eye safety level standards.
 20. An optical navigation method comprising: projecting a modulated laser beam at a surface; receiving a reflected signal from the surface, wherein the reflected signal indicates positional data; repeating the steps of projecting and and receiving; and comparing the reflected signals to determine differences in positional data.
 21. An optical navigation method, as defined in claim 20, projecting a modulated laser beam including: selecting two current settings; and applying a drive signal having a duty cycle toggling between the two current settings such that the power of within the drive signal is below the average power limit of the eye safety standards.
 22. An optical navigation method, as defined in claim 21, selecting two current settings including: selecting a first current setting that provides at least a minimum drive signal; and selecting a second current setting that provides a drive signal that meets eye safety level standards.
 23. An optical navigation method, as defined in claim 21, wherein the two current settings are adjacent current settings.
 24. An optical navigation method, as defined in claim 21, wherein: a first of the two current settings provides at least a minimum drive signal; and a second of the two current settings provides a drive signal below the peak power limit of the eye safety level standards. 